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(Art is “Monstrosity #16 / 2019” by boris-markevich.)

Here are some folk horror viewing recommendations for your day.

Today’s reading recommendation list is from Jo Furniss for Crime Reads: “10 Novels Based on Folk Horror.”

This quote from the article above seems fitting for the spooky season: 

The resurgence of the genre shows that folk horror is apt for our times. Identities are fluid. No bad deed goes unpunished. The civilized world is only a heartbeat away from primal and uncanny threats.

The genre is also nostalgic for a rural England that is as far from Downtown Abbey as you can get in a four-horse carriage. This England is afeared of change. In times of crisis, we return to the old ways, which offer a reassuring connection to a simple past. But at the cost of old evils. There is a sense that all progress is a chimera, that our modern sophistication is itself a form of naivety.

Step into the forest (or the marshes or the moors) and I am no different to my ancestors. Alone. Vulnerable. Insignificant in the presence of something older, deeper, unknowable but unquestionably there. I may glimpse a movement in the trees and wonder if it’s real. Then I realize that of course it’s real; it’s me that is ephemeral. Only I am in doubt.

It is deeply unsettling for modern people to encounter forces out of our control. We believe we control nature itself; fertility, aging, health. We have a choice over where and how we live. Via technology, we have all human knowledge at our fingertips, so we rarely need to wonder. And yet our biggest questions remain stubbornly unanswered. Why do bad things happen? How do I know who to trust? What makes someone evil?

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(Art is “Monstrosity #14_1 / 2017” by boris-markevich.)


Date: 2020-10-28 01:41 pm (UTC)
troyce: (Default)
From: [personal profile] troyce
I'm glad to see Night of the Demon get a mention. Martha bought the DVD several years ago and it's become one of my favorite Halloween films. Interesting trivia. The train station scenes were all filmed at the Bricket Wood train station. Bricket Wood is where Gerald Gardner had his covenstead at a nudist camp just a short distance NW of the station. During the 50's when the movie was made.

re: oct 28

Date: 2020-10-28 05:11 pm (UTC)
acciochocolate: (Halloween road by erised_dream)
From: [personal profile] acciochocolate
That last quote is so very true. W/o electricity, where would we be??

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